Cherniak William, Anguyo Geoffrey, Meaney Christopher, Yuan Kong Ling, Malhame Isabelle, Pace Romina, Sodhi Sumeet, Silverman Michael
Department of Family and Community Medicine, Division of Emergency Medicine, The Markham-Stouffville Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Bridge to Health Medical and Dental, Toronto, Canada.
PLoS One. 2017 Apr 12;12(4):e0175440. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0175440. eCollection 2017.
In rural Uganda pregnant women often lack access to health services, do not attend antenatal care, and tend to utilize traditional healers/birth attendants. We hypothesized that receiving a message advertising that "you will be able to see your baby by ultrasound" would motivate rural Ugandan women who otherwise might use a traditional birth attendant to attend antenatal care, and that those women would subsequently be more satisfied with care. A cluster randomized trial was conducted across eight rural sub-counties in southwestern Uganda. Sub-counties were randomized to a control arm, with advertisement of antenatal care with no mention of portable obstetric ultrasound (four communities, n = 59), or an intervention arm, with advertisement of portable obstetric ultrasound. Advertisement of portable obstetric ultrasound was further divided into intervention A) word of mouth advertisement of portable obstetric ultrasound and antenatal care (one communitity, n = 16), B) radio advertisement of only antenatal care and word of mouth advertisement of antenatal care and portable obstetric ultrasound (one community, n = 7), or C) word of mouth + radio advertisement of both antenatal care and portable obstetric ultrasound (two communities, n = 75). The primary outcome was attendance to antenatal care. 159 women presented to antenatal care across eight sub-counties. The rate of attendance was 65.1 (per 1000 pregnant women, 95% CI 38.3-110.4) where portable obstetric ultrasound was advertised by radio and word of mouth, as compared to a rate of 11.1 (95% CI 6.1-20.1) in control communities (rate ratio 5.9, 95% CI 2.6-13.0, p<0.0001). Attendance was also improved in women who had previously seen a traditional healer (13.0, 95% CI 5.4-31.2) compared to control (1.5, 95% CI 0.5-5.0, rate ratio 8.7, 95% CI 2.0-38.1, p = 0.004). By advertising antenatal care and portable obstetric ultrasound by radio attendance was significantly improved. This study suggests that women can be motivated to attend antenatal care when offered the concrete incentive of seeing their baby.
在乌干达农村地区,孕妇往往难以获得医疗服务,不参加产前护理,而是倾向于求助于传统治疗师/助产士。我们推测,向她们传递“你将能够通过超声看到宝宝”这一宣传信息,会促使那些原本可能求助于传统助产士的乌干达农村妇女参加产前护理,并且这些妇女随后会对护理服务更满意。在乌干达西南部的八个农村次县开展了一项整群随机试验。次县被随机分为对照组,宣传产前护理但不提及便携式产科超声(四个社区,n = 59),以及干预组,宣传便携式产科超声。便携式产科超声的宣传又进一步分为干预措施A)便携式产科超声和产前护理的口碑宣传(一个社区,n = 16),B)仅产前护理的广播宣传以及产前护理和便携式产科超声的口碑宣传(一个社区,n = 7),或C)产前护理和便携式产科超声的口碑宣传 + 广播宣传(两个社区,n = 75)。主要结局是产前护理的就诊率。八个次县共有159名妇女前来接受产前护理。在通过广播和口碑宣传便携式产科超声的地方,就诊率为65.1(每1000名孕妇,95%置信区间38.3 - 110.4),而对照组的就诊率为11.1(95%置信区间6.1 - 20.1)(率比5.9,95%置信区间2.6 - 13.0,p<0.0001)。与对照组(1.5,95%置信区间0.5 - 5.0,率比8.7,95%置信区间2.0 - 38.1,p = 0.004)相比,之前看过传统治疗师的妇女的就诊率也有所提高(13.0,95%置信区间5.4 - 31.2)。通过广播宣传产前护理和便携式产科超声,就诊率显著提高。这项研究表明,当向妇女提供能看到宝宝这一具体激励措施时,她们会更愿意参加产前护理。